The Thieves of Faith (Michael St. Pierre Book 2) by Richard Doetsch
Even though this is the second in a series, it's a stand-alone book. You don't need to read the prior volumes to enjoy it.
Michael St. Pierre has been instructed to steal a painting: 'The Bequest' by Chaucer Govier. Doing a favor to his good friend, Genevieve Zivera, he gets away with it and finds a map of the bowels of the Kremlin attached to the painting. Following Genevieve's instruction he destroys the painting and the map.
Soon after that, on a final request from his dying ex-wife, Michael is reunited with his biological father: Stephen Kelley. But as he meets his father, Michael is forced to see Lucien Zivera kidnap his father, and in order to save the life of both his biological father and Genevieve, Michael has to retrieve a gold box hidden inside those labyrinthic tunnels under the Kremlin.
But unbeknownst to Michael, the map he destroyed was a series of tunnels built by Ivan the Terrible who hid immeasurable treasures that have been lost to humanity. Now a master thief has the ultimate motivation to stage an assault on the Kremlin’s inner sanctum. Two lives depend on it. Thousands of years of religious faith hinge on it. And a man’s conscience, skill, and passion will not let him fail.
After finding the second Govier painting, 'The Eternal' Michael retrieves a second map that will enable him to enter the tunnels and retrieve the golden box.
Unfortunately, Michael and Zivera are not the only ones looking for the box. For Michael St. Pierre, history’s most daring heist is only one piece of an intricate puzzle reaching from an ancient monastery in Scotland to a hideaway in Corsica—where a madman has built an empire of terror. Haunted by his own family secrets, and surrounded by the precious few people he can trust (Fater Simon Bellatory and Paul Busch), Michael will take on a mission that will make him the most hunted man in the world. But when an astounding truth, buried deep beneath the Kremlin, erupts with shattering force, he may unleash a relic too dangerous to possess.
Narrated from the third person point of view, this is a fascinating, quick, and hard-to-put-down book. The plot is complex, interesting, and filled with a large amount of research. As you walk through the Kremlin, you feel you are there with Michael. The plot is amazing and is filled with multiple turns and twists that will keep you melted to the book. The characters are alive and come out of the page.
I loved it and highly recommend it.